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Dive into the research topics where Maria Xeroudaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Xeroudaki.


Biomaterials | 2016

Composite core-and-skirt collagen hydrogels with differential degradation for corneal therapeutic applications

Mehrdad Rafat; Maria Xeroudaki; Marina Koulikovska; Peter Sherrell; Fredrik Groth; Per Fagerholm; Neil Lagali

UNLABELLED Scarcity of donor tissue to treat corneal blindness and the need to deliver stem cells or pharmacologic agents to ensure corneal graft survival are major challenges. Here, new composite collagen-based hydrogels are developed as implants to restore corneal transparency while serving as a possible reservoir for cells and drugs. The composite hydrogels have a centrally transparent core and embedded peripheral skirt of adjustable transparency and degradability, with the skirt exhibiting faster degradation in vitro. Both core and skirt supported human epithelial cell populations in vitro and the skirt merged homogeneously with the core material to smoothly distribute a mechanical load in vitro. After in vivo transplantation in rabbit corneas over three months, composites maintained overall corneal shape and integrity, while skirt degradation could be tracked in vivo and non-invasively due to partial opacity. Skirt degradation was associated with partial collagen breakdown, thinning, and migration of host stromal cells and macrophages, while the central core maintained integrity and transparency as host cells migrated and nerves regenerated. IMPACT This study indicates the feasibility of a collagen-based composite hydrogel to maintain corneal stability and transparency while providing a degradable peripheral reservoir for cell or substance release.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2016

Effect of connexin 43 inhibition by the mimetic peptide Gap27 on corneal wound healing, inflammation and neovascularization

Hossein Mostafa Elbadawy; Pierfrancesco Mirabelli; Maria Xeroudaki; Mohit Parekh; Marina Bertolin; Claudia Breda; Carlo Cagini; Diego Ponzin; Neil Lagali; Stefano Ferrari

The connexin 43 (Cx43) mimetic peptide Gap27 was designed to transiently block the function of this gap junction. This study was undertaken to investigate the effect of Gap27 on corneal healing, inflammation and neovascularization.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Factors regulating capillary remodeling in a reversible model of inflammatory corneal angiogenesis

Anthony Mukwaya; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Maria Xeroudaki; Zaheer Ali; Anton Lennikov; Lasse Jensen; Neil Lagali

Newly formed microcapillary networks arising in adult organisms by angiogenic and inflammatory stimuli contribute to pathologies such as corneal and retinal blindness, tumor growth, and metastasis. Therapeutic inhibition of pathologic angiogenesis has focused on targeting the VEGF pathway, while comparatively little attention has been given to remodeling of the new microcapillaries into a stabilized, functional, and persistent vascular network. Here, we used a novel reversible model of inflammatory angiogenesis in the rat cornea to investigate endogenous factors rapidly invoked to remodel, normalize and regress microcapillaries as part of the natural response to regain corneal avascularity. Rapid reversal of an inflammatory angiogenic stimulus suppressed granulocytic activity, enhanced recruitment of remodelling macrophages, induced capillary intussusception, and enriched pathways and processes involving immune cells, chemokines, morphogenesis, axonal guidance, and cell motility, adhesion, and cytoskeletal functions. Whole transcriptome gene expression analysis revealed suppression of numerous inflammatory and angiogenic factors and enhancement of endogenous inhibitors. Many of the identified genes function independently of VEGF and represent potentially new targets for molecular control of the critical process of microvascular remodeling and regression in the cornea.


Scientific Data | 2016

A microarray whole-genome gene expression dataset in a rat model of inflammatory corneal angiogenesis

Anthony Mukwaya; Jessica M. Lindvall; Maria Xeroudaki; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Zaheer Ali; Anton Lennikov; Lasse Jensen; Neil Lagali

In angiogenesis with concurrent inflammation, many pathways are activated, some linked to VEGF and others largely VEGF-independent. Pathways involving inflammatory mediators, chemokines, and micro-RNAs may play important roles in maintaining a pro-angiogenic environment or mediating angiogenic regression. Here, we describe a gene expression dataset to facilitate exploration of pro-angiogenic, pro-inflammatory, and remodelling/normalization-associated genes during both an active capillary sprouting phase, and in the restoration of an avascular phenotype. The dataset was generated by microarray analysis of the whole transcriptome in a rat model of suture-induced inflammatory corneal neovascularisation. Regions of active capillary sprout growth or regression in the cornea were harvested and total RNA extracted from four biological replicates per group. High quality RNA was obtained for gene expression analysis using microarrays. Fold change of selected genes was validated by qPCR, and protein expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry. We provide a gene expression dataset that may be re-used to investigate corneal neovascularisation, and may also have implications in other contexts of inflammation-mediated angiogenesis.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Genome-wide expression differences in anti- Vegf and dexamethasone treatment of inflammatory angiogenesis in the rat cornea

Pierfrancesco Mirabelli; Anthonny Mukwaya; Anton Lennikov; Maria Xeroudaki; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Mira Schaupper; Neil Lagali

Angiogenesis as a pathological process in the eye can lead to blindness. In the cornea, suppression of angiogenesis by anti-VEGF treatment is only partially effective while steroids, although effective in treating inflammation and angiogenesis, have broad activity leading to undesirable side effects. In this study, genome-wide expression was investigated in a suture-induced corneal neovascularization model in rats, to investigate factors differentially targeted by dexamethasone and anti-Vegf. Topical treatment with either rat-specific anti-Vegf, dexamethasone, or normal goat IgG (sham) was given to sutured corneas for 48 hours, after which in vivo imaging, tissue processing for RNA microarray, and immunofluorescence were performed. Dexamethasone suppressed limbal vasodilation (P < 0.01) and genes in PI3K-Akt, focal adhesion, and chemokine signaling pathways more effectively than anti-Vegf. The most differentially expressed genes were confirmed by immunofluorescence, qRTPCR and Western blot. Strong suppression of Reg3g and the inflammatory chemokines Ccl2 and Cxcl5 and activation of classical complement pathway factors C1r, C1s, C2, and C3 occurred with dexamethasone treatment, effects absent with anti-Vegf treatment. The genome-wide results obtained in this study provide numerous potential targets for specific blockade of inflammation and angiogenesis in the cornea not addressed by anti-Vegf treatment, as possible alternatives to broad-acting immunosuppressive therapy.


Acta Ophthalmologica | 2016

RGTA in corneal wound healing after transepithelial laser ablation in a rabbit model: a randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled study.

Maria Xeroudaki; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Johan Germundsson; Per Fagerholm; Neil Lagali

To evaluate the efficacy of the agent RGTA for epithelial, stromal and nerve regeneration after laser‐induced corneal wounding in rabbits.


Angiogenesis | 2018

Time-dependent LXR/RXR pathway modulation characterizes capillary remodeling in inflammatory corneal neovascularization

Anthony Mukwaya; Anton Lennikov; Maria Xeroudaki; Pierfrancesco Mirabelli; Mieszko Lachota; Lasse Jensen; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Neil Lagali

Inflammation in the normally immune-privileged cornea can initiate a pathologic angiogenic response causing vision-threatening corneal neovascularization. Inflammatory pathways, however, are numerous, complex and are activated in a time-dependent manner. Effective resolution of inflammation and associated angiogenesis in the cornea requires knowledge of these pathways and their time dependence, which has, to date, remained largely unexplored. Here, using a model of endogenous resolution of inflammation-induced corneal angiogenesis, we investigate the time dependence of inflammatory genes in effecting capillary regression and the return of corneal transparency. Endogenous capillary regression was characterized by a progressive thinning and remodeling of angiogenic capillaries and inflammatory cell retreat in vivo in the rat cornea. By whole-genome longitudinal microarray analysis, early suppression of VEGF ligand-receptor signaling and inflammatory pathways preceded an unexpected later-phase preferential activation of LXR/RXR, PPARα/RXRα and STAT3 canonical pathways, with a concurrent attenuation of LPS/IL-1 inhibition of RXR function and Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathways. Potent downstream inflammatory cytokines such as Cxcl5, IL-1β, IL-6 and Ccl2 were concomitantly downregulated during the remodeling phase. Upstream regulators of the inflammatory pathways included Socs3, Sparc and ApoE. A complex and coordinated time-dependent interplay between pro- and anti-inflammatory signaling pathways highlights a potential anti-inflammatory role of LXR/RXR, PPARα/RXRα and STAT3 signaling pathways in resolving inflammatory corneal angiogenesis.


Scientific Data | 2017

Genome-wide expression datasets of anti-VEGF and dexamethasone treatment of angiogenesis in the rat cornea

Anthony Mukwaya; Pierfrancesco Mirabelli; Anton Lennikov; Maria Xeroudaki; Mira Schaupper; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Neil Lagali

Therapeutics against pathologic new blood vessel growth, particularly those targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) are of enormous clinical interest. In the eye, where anti-VEGF agents are in widespread clinical use for treating retinal and corneal blindness, only partial or transient efficacy and resistance to anti-VEGF agents are among the major drawbacks. Conversely, corticosteroids have long been used in ophthalmology for their potency in suppressing inflammation and angiogenesis, but their broad biological activity can give rise to side effects such as glaucoma and cataract. To aid in the search for more targeted and effective anti-angiogenic therapies in the eye, we present here a dataset comparing gene expression changes in dexamethasone versus anti-Vegfa treatment of inflammation leading to angiogenesis in the rat cornea. Global gene expression analysis with GeneChip Rat 230 2.0 microarrays was conducted and the metadata submitted to Expression Omnibus repository. Here, we present a high-quality validated dataset enabling genome-wide comparison of genes differentially targeted by dexamethasone and anti-Vegf treatments, to identify potential alternative therapeutic targets for evaluation.


Experimental Eye Research | 2014

Early effects of dexamethasone and anti-VEGF therapy in an inflammatory corneal neovascularization model.

Pierfrancesco Mirabelli; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Maria Xeroudaki; Marina Koulikovska; Neil Lagali


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017

Topical steroids vs anti-Vegf in experimental corneal neovascularization: differential efficacy, microscopic features and genomic response

Pierfrancesco Mirabelli; Anthony Mukwaya; Anton Lennikov; Maria Xeroudaki; Beatrice Bourghardt Peebo; Neil Lagali

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